I am going to try something a little brash. The link below is from the "hijack" thread, but will say how I think it applies to out current polical chaos.
y66, on 2016-April-02, 08:06, said:
I will pull out [most of] the section Y quotes:
Quote
WHEN I returned to Berlin recently after a few months away, a friend asked me to try a new Chinese restaurant in Kreuzberg, a hip multiethnic neighborhood in the city. "It's close to the subway station Kottbusser Tor," he texted. "But take a cab, otherwise it's too dangerous."I would have thought he was joking, but he is not the type. I asked the cabdriver, a young man of Turkish origin. Had Kottbusser Tor suddenly become a no-go zone? To my shock, he replied, "Yes, now that all these people from North Africa are here it has become really dangerous."
I got out of the cab and looked around. Tourists strolling, a few people on bicycles in spite of the cold, women in head scarves pushing strollers. Had the city changed? It looked the same to me. But my friend is not prone to hysteria, and the cabdriver didn't seem as if he was either, so the friendly scene suddenly seemed ominous.
The area in question is a refugee area. The writer's friend, and the cab driver, regard it as a dangerous area. The writer does not regard his friend as given to hysteria, and, although he of course did not know the cab driver, he did not appear to be given to hysteria either.
Now to the U.S. I would be very happy if the phrase "politically correct" was never again uttered. As far as I can tell, it has no meaning, or maybe it has several constantly changing meanings. But there is often disrespect for people who protect themselves through intuitive judgment. Most likely neither the writer's friend nor the cabdriver has researched the recent crime history of the area. If challenged in a debate to prove that the area is dangerous, they would come up short. Still, they see it as dangerous and they use caution.
I see the use of intuitive judgment as an extremely valuable skill. It keeps us alive. I think I have mentioned the first time I was in Philadelphia. I had gone to the touristy exhibits, I had had dinner, I was out walking about with no particular destination in mind. Then I thought "Uh oh". Everyone about was white, it wasn't even all that rundown, but I decided it would be best to do an about face so I did. I can't prove this was right or even explain it, but I turned around. The mistakes I most regret are those where I have ignored this intuitive response.
It has become popular to explain such responses as irrational and bigoted. Usually it is designated as somethingphobia. When I was young I was a bit, maybe more than a bit, acrophobic so I understand what a phobia is. The accusations of somethingphobia are frequently off base, I think.
At any rate, if you tell someone who is trying his best to lead his own life safely and mind his own business that he is a somethingphobic bigot, you don't endear yourself to him. And if you are running for office, you don't get his vote.
I wouldn't vote for Donald Trump if you waterboarded me. But he is getting more votes than I or most people ever expected. I think my comments above are part of the explanation for this.